outta me,â Lyse groaned as she rested an arm around Eleanoraâs frail shoulder, hiccupping back tears. âI looked all around the house, but you werenât answering me, and then I opened the door, and I thoughtââ
âYou thought I was dead,â Eleanora finished, with a snort.
âNo, thatâs not true,â Lyse said, lying through her teeth.
âI donât know why everyone wants to put me in my grave before my time,â Eleanora said, sighing. âIâm not dead yet, thank God.â
Lyse hiccupped up another sob, then sighed.
âI donât want you to die.â
She spat the words out, as if saying them fast enough would magically keep Eleanora alive forever.
âBut everybody dies, Bear,â Eleanora said, removing Lyseâs arm from her shoulder. âThatâs the price of being alive.â
âWell, I donât want you to have to pay it.â
Eleanora laughed.
âI donât mind, actually,â she said after a few moments of silence. âDeath isnât the end, Bear. I know it for a fact.â
Lyse stared back at her. Theyâd never discussed Eleanoraâs religious views before, and she was surprised to discover that sheâd expected her great-aunt to be an atheist, or at the very least agnostic. Eleanoraâs avowal that life went on after death was an odd pill to swallow.
âThere is more in this world than what we can touch, see, hear, taste, and smell, Lyse,â Eleanora continued. âWhich is a lovely way of segueing into another topic, one Iâve wanted to discuss with you before but was too cowardly to do so.â
Lyseâs mouth went dry as a desert, the lack of saliva forcing the smooth muscles in her throat to contract painfully against one another as she tried to swallow. She didnât know what her great-aunt was going to say to her, but it couldnât be good.
âDonât look so scared,â Eleanora said gently. âI promised you earlier that there were things to talk about, and they werenât bad.â
Lyse nodded but didnât trust herself to speak.
âI guess the way to do this is to just rip the Band-Aid off,â Eleanora murmured, looking up at Lyse. She smiled, and Lyse was sure the gesture was meant to convey calm, but it did the opposite. Now Lyse was
sure
something terrible was in the offing.
âDonât give me those sad eyes,â Eleanora said, looking put upon for the first time since Lyse had gotten home. âYou had that same look on your face the first time you asked me to take you to the store to buy maxipads. Itâs really not that bad.â
Lyse didnât think sheâd ever felt terrified
and
mortified at the same time. It was a brand-new experience.
âJust tell me,â Lyse said finally, the words sticking in her dry throat.
âOkay, Iâll just tell you,â Eleanora agreed. âOh lord, this is gonna sound nuts, but here goes.â She took Lyseâs hand and gave it a gentle squeeze. âLyse, Iâm a witch.â
âAre you high?â It was out of her mouth before Lyse could stop herself.
Eleanora raised one pale silver eyebrow.
âAs a matter of fact, I am.â
Lyse pushed off the bed, stumbling to her feet, and then she began to pace. Whatever sheâd been expecting, it was certainly not this.
âWhat does this mean?â Lyse said, trying to wrap her mind around what Eleanora had just told her. âAre you, like, a Wiccan or something? Do you like to go burn effigies out in the woods, or dance naked under the stars, or do sexual-healing spells, or whatever?â
Eleanora let out a loud guffaw.
âMy goodness, do you have an imaginationââ
â
Iâm
the one with an imagination?â Lyse said, incredulously. âYouâre the one who just called herself a witch.â
Eleanora shrugged and leaned back against the tangle of bedsheets Lyse had
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